A Royal Navy AW-101 Merlin in action
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 16th Feb 13
On November 4,
1977, Prime Minister Morarji Desai was flying from Delhi to Jorhat in an Indian
Air Force (IAF) Russian-built Tupolev-124 jet, when the ultimate emergency
happened: an aircraft with the PM on board lost power, descending dangerously
close to the ground and threatening to plough into the Brahmaputra plain. The
pilot, Wing Commander Clarence D’Lima, and four other crewmembers nursed the
aircraft along, struggling to keep it airborne as they lined up for the
approach to Jorhat airfield. They almost made it; just short of the airfield,
the aircraft hit some trees and smacked onto the ground heavily. Tragically, all
five crewmembers died while making that landing but, thanks to their skill,
Morarji Desai walked out of the aircraft unhurt.
That is the
world of the IAF Headquarters Communication Squadron, which operates from an innocuous
corner of Palam Airport in New Delhi. Formed in January 1947, the Comn
Squadron, as it is referred to, has flown not just Indian prime ministers,
presidents and top cabinet ministers, but also dignitaries like Nikita
Kruschev, Boris Yelstin, Chou En-Lai, Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa, Jaqueline
Kennedy, the Shah of Iran, Ho Chi Minh, the Dalai Lama, Marshal Josip Tito,
Kofi Annan, John Major, Princess Anne and Ranasinghe Premadasa. Starting with
the venerable Dakota, the Comn Squadron --- whose Pegasus crest bears the motto
“Seva aur Suraksha” --- has flown twelve different types of aircraft. After a
decision in the late 1990s that the old aircraft in its fleet were unsafe, it
now flies a world-class fleet that includes five Embraer-135 BJ Legacy business
jets, bought for Rs 750 crore, which entered service in 2005-06 (12 passengers,
5700 kilometers range); and three Boeing Business Jets, bought for some Rs 1,000
crore, which entered service in 2008-09. These aircraft include the latest
electronic protective equipment and anti-missile counter-measures, of the kind
that protect the US president when he is aboard Air Force One.
While the
business jet purchases gave rise to bitter complaints about “pampering VIPs”,
it is the Comn Squadron’s third aircraft that has created the greatest storm
--- the purchase of 12 AW-101 helicopters from Anglo-Italian company,
AgustaWestland. The Euro 556 million (Rs 4,000 crore rupees at current exchange
rates) contract, signed in 2010, is for eight helicopters in the VIP
configuration and four “non-VIP” helicopters of the same make for carrying
security personnel and equipment.
With just
three of these helicopters having been delivered so far, the contract has
juddered to a halt. On Tuesday, Feb 12, Italian prosecutors in Milan arrested
Giuseppe Orsi, the chairman and chief executive of Finmeccanica, that country’s
second-biggest corporate entity, which reported first half revenue in 2012 of
Euro 8 billion, and which employs 70,000 workers worldwide. That day Italian investigators
also raided the Milan offices of AgustaWestland, a subsidiary of Finmeccanica.
At the heart of the investigation was the question: did senior executives
violate bribery and corruption laws in pushing the sale of helicopters to
India? The allegations relate to the period from 2010, when the contract was
awarded --- and when Orsi was the CEO of AgustaWestland, --- until December
2012.
Why was the
Italian law enforcement machinery bothered about whether bribes were paid in
India, where corruption is well known to be endemic in defence deals? Former
Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, reputedly a path-breaking pioneer in
the realms of political corruption and personal lasciviousness, declared:
“Bribes… are not crimes. We’re talking about paying a commission to someone in
that country… Why, because those are the rules in that country. The fact that
there is risk of (Italian) magistrates intervening I consider to be economic
suicide.”
Berlusconi’s
intervention on behalf of Orsi illustrates the real nature of the ongoing
Italian investigation, which is actually about politics rather than business ethics.
With Italian elections due next fortnight, Berlusconi --- heading the People of
Freedom (PDL) party --- hopes to become kingmaker at the head of a right-of-centre
coalition. For that, he has re-established an old alliance with the right-wing
party, Lega Nord (Northern League), which hates immigrants to Italy as much as
it hates the country’s “corrupt and lazy south”, which supposedly feeds off the
hardworking north. Giuseppe Orsi, the arrested Finmeccanica chief, is known to
be close to the Northern League. For the Italian government, therefore, the
central problem with the payments allegedly made to middlemen in India is not
that there was bribery involved. Rather, it is the belief that Euro 10 million
from the money earmarked for corrupt Indians was funneled back to the Northern
League. In other words, the Italian government is incensed that Finmeccanica
used some of the money (legitimately) charged off for bribing Indian officials
in the AgustaWestland contract, for (illegitimately) funding a domestic
political party, the Northern League.
On Tuesday,
the backwash from this Italian political drama flooded Indian television
screens when the news broke of Orsi’s arrest. Since last year, sporadic
newspaper reports, notably in The Indian Express, have highlighted the ongoing Italian
investigation, causing the defence ministry (MoD) to periodically ask the
foreign ministry (MEA) and the Indian Embassy in Rome for information. But
there was little real follow-up from the MEA; and the MoD itself seems to have
been taken by surprise at the ferocity of the Indian media’s coverage of this
apparent scandal.
Providing a
focus to the media’s fury were Italian investigators’ allegations that a former
IAF chief, Air Chief Marshal Shashindra Pal Tyagi, had been named in the
Italian investigation report as one of the alleged beneficiaries of Italian
largesse. Tyagi, it was alleged, received money through three improbably named
male cousins: Julie Tyagi, Docsa Tyagi and Sandeep Tyagi.
Jumping feet-first
into the blame-game was the political opposition, particularly the BJP, which
wasted little time in pointing to “the Italian connection”, a thinly disguised
swipe at Congress President Sonia Gandhi.
It may be a
leap of logic to compare Finmeccanica’s alleged payoffs to the 1980s Bofors
scandal as the BJP has inevitably done, but there are similarities in how both
cases draw attention to the arms dealer networks that flourish in New Delhi, in
flagrant violation of the government ban on arms middlemen. In addition to
long-existing networks with names like Khanna, Nanda and Choudhrie, foreign
agents have flourished for decades, fatting on the capital city’s cocktail
circuit in apparent disregard of visa regulations or immigration controls. If
Ottavio Quattrochi attained eternal infamy during the Bofors investigations,
two expatriates, Swiss-American citizen, Guido Haschke, and British citizen,
Christian Michel, have been named by Italian prosecutors as key players in
bribing Indian officials.
Christian
Michel, who runs Panama-registered Keyser Incorporated, has never bothered to
hide his profession. In 2004, he actually sued French aviation company,
Dassault, for failing to pay him commission in New Delhi’s Euro 350 million
purchase of ten Mirage-2000 fighters in the year 2000. The French court threw
out his lawsuit, ruling that his agreement with Dassault had expired two years
before the deal was concluded.
Also in the
spotlight is Carlo Gerosa, an Italian who runs a company based in Tunisia.
According to the Italian investigation, a sum of Euro 41 million was to be paid
to these three agents, funneled in from Tunisia against Indian invoices for
software services by Chandigarh-based firm, Aeromatrix. That amount was later
raised by Euro 10 million, with this additional amount diverted to the Northern
League in Italy.
Although these
agents (and others too numerous to be named) operate quite openly in India, it
could legitimately be asked why the government has never taken action against
them. The answer, according to a top government official, is that “MoD
officials, and even political parties, do not want to stop the flow of funds
that comes from these people. This is a gravy train and the money is
distributed widely… to individuals as well as to political parties across the
spectrum.”
For Defence
Minister AK Antony, whose political career rests on a foundation of probity,
the AgustaWestland allegations are a serious challenge. On Friday the MoD
issued an unprecedented 2,100-word “factsheet”, conveying the message that the
key decisions that led to AgustaWestland winning the contract were taken by the
NDA government in 2003, and by his predecessor as defence minister, Pranab
Mukherjee, in 2004-05.
One of the key
decisions that brought the AW-101 into reckoning was: lowering the requirement
of operational ceiling from 6,000 metres (19,685 feet) to 4,500 metres (14,750
feet). The factsheet explains in chronological detail that the decision was
taken in 2003 by the Principal Secretary to the NDA prime minister, who
happened to be the all-powerful Brajesh Mishra. It was Pranab Mukherjee, who was
defence minister from 2004 till October 2006, who increased the numbers from
eight helicopters to twelve.
Interestingly,
the MoD factsheet conveys the undisguised impression that the foreign ministry
(MEA) dragged its feet in pursuing the case with the Italian authorities. In
February 2012, “MoD sought a factual report in the
matter from our Embassy in Rome.” It wrote again to the embassy in Rome in
April 2012, following which the embassy made a formal request to the prosecutor’s
office in Naples. Again in October, the MoD took up the matter with the MEA,
noting in the factsheet that it was willing to take action even on the basis of
press reports. However, clearly, the Italian authorities were blocking Indian
requests and the MEA was unable, or unwilling, to press them harder. Following
the arrest of Giuseppe Orsi on Tuesday, the MoD referred the case to the
Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for action.
For now, according to the factsheet, the MoD has decided
to issue a show cause notice to AgustaWestland. It has also “put on hold all
further payments to AgustaWestland. Besides this, the Indian Embassy has been
requested to provide the factual position and any other relevant
information. The CEO of M/s AgustaWestland has also been asked to
categorically state the clear position in view of the current developments
indicating specifically if any financial transaction has taken place with any
Indian individual/entity which would be violative of the Integrity Pact or any other
terms and conditions of the contract.”
The “Integrity Pact”, which is mandated in the Defence
Procurement Procedure (DPP) in overseas defence contracts, permits the MoD to
cancel a contract, recover payment, blacklist a company and take penal action against
a vendor. The MoD says, “Government is
determined to take all possible legal and administrative action against the
guilty parties.” For
now, Finmeccanica and AgustaWestland maintain their innocence. After Orsi’s
arrest on Tuesday, a statement said, “Finmeccanica confirms that the operating
activities and ongoing projects of the Company will continue as usual.” But
with the CBI now on the case, the company is under a dark cloud in India, as in
Italy.
So from a Defence Corrospondent you have graduated to a political mouthpiece..
ReplyDeleteIt was well expected. You are following the other Shukla..
@ Anonymous 13:30
ReplyDelete...and from a crappy little anonymous poster, you remain a crappy little anonymous poster who is too ashamed of his own name to even post under it.
if MoD... can't find any quattrocchis... AW deinies everthing... italian prosecution... withelds everything... what will antony do... ???... turns out... an eyewash/BS... all this...
ReplyDeleteDoes it really matter...man, you really started to stink.
ReplyDeleteThis sir, is the most comprehensive account. Keep up the good work. I sometimes believe bribes should be made legal in india, the phenomenon is not going to go away.
ReplyDeleteFantastic and professional as always!Thanks, Ajai.
ReplyDeleteMathew Dallas.
Good reporting! Unlike most lazy Indian journalists you have clearly spoken to sources in Italy.
ReplyDelete